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Sales Literature and Sell Sheets
Honing
Your Pitch
Jim Schakenbach
Managing Partner, SCT Group Inc.
www.sctgrp.com
If youre getting ready to launch a new product or service, or even
a new company, chances are youve spent a lot of time, effort, and
probably money to prepare for the roll-out. But how much time have you
spent developing and practicing what to say? If youre like most
business people, probably not a lot, and that can come back to bite you.
I was recently at an entrepreneurial event where one lucky entrepreneur
got the chance to stand up in front of a roomful of potential investors
and deliver a one-minute pitch about his company. Unfortunately, this
hapless individual did a poor job preparing for this golden opportunity
and wasted his valuable sixty seconds warming up to his topic, talking
about his competition and the marketplace. He never did get around to
actually talking about his company and its product. The net result was
an audience that was left remembering the names of all his competitors,
but not his!
He could have turned this into a lucrative pitch if only he had taken
a little more time to think through what is it that his company and product
offer. This requires a certain amount of discipline, objectiveness, and
practice. Think of this process in the same way you would an elevator
pitch those short but decisive opportunities to sell someone in
the one-on-one environment of an elevator ride between several floors.
Its also similar to a radio commercial or even a highway billboard
you have a very short period of time in which to clearly explain
what it is you are offering.
This can be a daunting task for companies selling a complicated technical
product. Nevertheless, it can be done. It means stepping back from the
technical specifications and features of your product and clearly identifying
the pain it addresses the reason someone would need to buy it.
It also requires something we at the SCT Group call communicating
with clarity avoiding those grammatical and marketing crutches
so often used by sales and marketing people. You know what Im talking
about: next generation solution, leading edge technology,
performance driven operatibility. Purge this worst kind of
fat from your sales pitch and youll begin to see the lights coming
on a lot sooner for the people with whom youre trying to communicate,
whether its investors, potential customers, or even your own board
of directors.
Once you think you have your message in understandable language, take
a deep breath and pull out your editing knife. See if you can hone your
pitch down to twenty-five words or less. Make it as simple and as compelling
as possible. Once you do this, you can be confident that you will be communicating
with clarity.
©2007 SCT Group, Inc.
sctgrp.com
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